Of the characters who were specially created for EAGLE, Dan Dare featured in a hugely successful series of radio serials on
Radio Luxembourg between 1951 and 1955,
where he was played by Noel Johnson, who had originated the popular Dick Barton character in 1947, for BBC
radio. The BBC produced their own four part Dan
Dare serial in 1990 to mark EAGLE'S fortieth
anniversary, which featured Mick Brown as Dan and Donald Gee as Digby. In 1954, EAGLE began its own promotional
programme on Radio Luxembourg, called
Spread Your Wings and this featured a
six part Luck of the Legion serial,
narrated by Norman Shelley as an old legionnaire. Sergeant Luck also appeared
on the commercial Springbok Radio in South
Africa in 1979 in his own series, written by his creator Geoffrey Bond, twenty
years after the strip ended in EAGLE.
Tuesday, 11 September 2018
IN AND OUT OF THE EAGLE 5
WITH JIM DUCKETT
When EAGLE began,
radio was still king and two of its most popular strips originated as BBC radio
series. PC 49 began in 1947 and 112
half hour adventures of the London policeman, played by Brian Reece, were made
before the programme ended in 1953. PC 49’s
adventures began in the first issue of EAGLE and ran until 1957. The radio adventures of Riders of the Range, featuring Paul Carpenter as Jeff Arnold, began
in 1949 and six serials were broadcast between 1949 and 1953, with the EAGLE version beginning in December 1950
and running till March 1962. Unlike strip versions of later television series
in other comics, which were invariably notably inferior to their originals, the
EAGLE versions of both these radio
series compared most favourably, probably because they were written by their
creators and illustrated by excellent artists in John Worsley and Frank
Humphris, who made the strips their own. Their success is evidenced by the fact
that both outlasted their radio counterparts by several years.
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